I have several sets of Bear No.1 red and white tip limbs, from the 70s, I'm guessing. They're all pretty much the same length, but there is up to 1/8 inch variability in where the nocks are cut measured from the base of the limbs. Not enough to worry about, a few twists of the string one way or the other, and I can usually switch the limbs around to different risers with little trouble.
I've recently acquired two different sets of No. 1 newer limbs, probably made in the past 1 to 5 years. They have red and black laminated tips and black action wood wedges. Those limbs are are cut 1/2 to 5/8 inches shorter than my older limbs, and take a string about an inch and a half shorter than my old limbs, about 55 1/2 inches compared to about 57 inches, plus or minus a little, for my older No. 1 limbs (60-inch bow on a B riser).
In terms of tolerances, that's pretty far off. Did Bear just make some bad limbs? Did they change the specs for some reason? They shot OK, but I passed those limbs along because I didn't want to bother with another two string lengths for my A and B risers. Have any of you found this length discrepancy between older and new limbs?